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Ridgerunner Pack Up Methods When Wet (Backpacking)

My new Ridgerunner shipped today (ordered same day!). I'm curious how current (backpacking) owners pack up their hammock when the triangles are wet?

My previous hammock unhooked from the suspension well under the tarp.... so I just left my underquilt attached and stuffed the whole package into my pack liner with my top quilt because everything was dry. The wet suspension elements went in their own sack outside of my pack.

The Ridgerunner's triangles will stick out of my Superfly about 12" on each side. I'll install some drip lines for sure...but what methods do you use to keep the dry parts dry?

Well, I've only had mine for about a week and haven't had it out in the rain yet. But here's what I'm thinking.
The Ridgerunner comes with a Bishop Bag that opens and has a drawstring on each end. You can stuff the hammock into the bag and leave the suspension triangles outside the bag. I guess that still leaves the wet suspension in your pack but at least not in direct contact with your hammock. Maybe stuff the wet parts in a strong plastic bag and secure with a rubber band?
Hmmm...guess I don't have a good solution, but I bet someone here has some good ideas.

"...With saddle and pack, by paddle and track, let's go to the land of beyond."

In my mind, the perfect system would be a change to the hardware that holds the spreader bars. Think Dutch biner with a hole in it for the spreader bars. This way the backpacker could leave all suspension elements together and just un-clip the hammock body for dry packing...while the triangle stays with the other wet stuff in a separate exterior bag. Perhaps someone already has configured a solution like this....interested to see what comes up.

I love the ability to leave my insulation on the dry hammock body. I guess this could also really help out the Spindrift users.

I took a closer look at mine.
If you replace the apex buckle with a carabiner the "V" could be disconnected from your whoopies or straps. Then, if the "V" was wet, you could undo the larks head from the spreader pieces to separate them from the hammock.

Biners would be ideal...but the holes on the hardware are quite small. Some small soft shackles would work though...I'd just be concerned with adding too much length to hammock with a long footprint. Like the idea

When wet, I disengage the straps from the cinch buckles and pack them separately. The Amsteel triangle I just quickly wipe with a small piece of camp towel material that I keep for these kinds of jobs.

The only problem is if you use drip lines on the suspension, they will be wet. Mine are made from strips of the same camp towel material (Sham-Wow-type stuff) and a quick squeeze removes 90% of their water. Into the bag and off you go.

Don't forget the straps you just left hanging on the tree! Did that once. Luckily I'd only hiked 200 m down the trail.